Forever_Catholic
Active Member
Outside of Catholicism there are 30,000 or so Christian denominations, depending on how they’re counted. They are so splintered, as new ones continuously spin off from others, it’s hard to tell. You might count the Baptist Church as one church, for example, or you might count it as 1500 churches, because that’s about how many varieties there are, none of which quite agrees with any other.
All of the many Protestant churches are unified only in rejecting the one and only Church that Christ established. Within that generalization, they reject the authority that Jesus gave to it, sacraments he initiated for it and the graces he gives with them.
They accept some apostolic teaching, as found in Sacred Scripture, but not all of it. The oral teaching of the apostles, recorded in Sacred Tradition of the early Church, has been so thoroughly dismissed by Protestants for so long that it’s not even a known reality to most of them.
Worst of all is that Protestants only believe some of what Jesus said, as he said it. In order to separate from Catholicism, it is necessary for them to redefine or explain away some of Christ’s clearly articulated statements. He may have begun with “Truly, truly, I say to you,” but what follows is nevertheless declared to be symbolic of something else; not to be taken literally.
And so it goes for everything pertaining to the Eucharist, by which Jesus desires to commune with souls, and everything about the Church that he called “My Church.” So it goes also for the various other conflicts between what our Lord communicated and what Protestants are taught to believe.
All of the many Protestant churches are unified only in rejecting the one and only Church that Christ established. Within that generalization, they reject the authority that Jesus gave to it, sacraments he initiated for it and the graces he gives with them.
They accept some apostolic teaching, as found in Sacred Scripture, but not all of it. The oral teaching of the apostles, recorded in Sacred Tradition of the early Church, has been so thoroughly dismissed by Protestants for so long that it’s not even a known reality to most of them.
Worst of all is that Protestants only believe some of what Jesus said, as he said it. In order to separate from Catholicism, it is necessary for them to redefine or explain away some of Christ’s clearly articulated statements. He may have begun with “Truly, truly, I say to you,” but what follows is nevertheless declared to be symbolic of something else; not to be taken literally.
And so it goes for everything pertaining to the Eucharist, by which Jesus desires to commune with souls, and everything about the Church that he called “My Church.” So it goes also for the various other conflicts between what our Lord communicated and what Protestants are taught to believe.